Ottawa Citizen

Officer facing charges after driving drunk in 2019

- MARLO GLASS With files from Gary Dimmock

An Ottawa Police Service constable is facing discredita­ble conduct charges after pleading guilty to driving drunk in 2019.

Const. Umer Khan made a brief appearance on Thursday for a disciplina­ry hearing for the Police Services Act charges.

Khan previously pleaded guilty to drunk driving in 2019, for which he was fined $1,000. He also pleaded guilty to dangerous driving, but was granted a discharge.

According to court proceeding­s, on June 23, 2018, Khan was driving drunk when the Sûreté du Québec tried to pull him over on Highway 5 in Gatineau at 2:15 p.m., when the off-duty officer was doing 123 kilometres per hour in a 70 km/h zone.

But he kept driving, resulting in a chase across an interprovi­ncial bridge to a University of Ottawa parking lot, where Khan was arrested at gunpoint.

His breathalyz­er test registered twice the legal limit of blood alcohol concentrat­ion.

At the time, his lawyer argued the drunk driving fine was “grossly disproport­ionate” to the offence because Khan struggled with PTSD.

“Const. Khan has devoted his profession­al life to the public, as both a police officer and a member of the NATO mission in Afghanista­n, facing the trauma of near-death experience­s at home and overseas. Khan accepts the court's decision humbly and looks forward to a future of continued service to his community,” Solomon Friedman said at the time.

But Gatineau Justice Alexandra Marcil disagreed and said the officer posed a risk to society, and his reckless behaviour warranted a criminal record to enhance public safety.

Khan's disciplina­ry hearing was adjourned and scheduled to continue on May 6.

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